While most people inside and outside America feel that the right of free speech has succumbed to weaker minds and a move towards political correctness, a recent court decision would prove otherwise. DailyTech summed up what happened pretty nicely:

A California judge in the Sixth Appellate District in Santa Clara County last week ruled that anonymous trolls on the Internet are allowed to stay anonymous. Along with remaining anonymous, Internet trolls are able to say what they like, by exercising their First Amendment rights, no matter how belittling is it.

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This decision reversed a prior ruling made just two years ago, in which ten subpoenas were issued to people that would fit into the definition of "internet trolls" who took things to new extremes.

Sorry but where? First amendment protects rights provided that they are on public property. Private property, only laws apply. So, you can't troll in TPU, and what about foreign servers? Based on this kind of thinking, the only place you can troll under this ruling is on government servers....brilliant...

While most people inside and outside America feel that the right of free speech has succumbed to weaker minds and a move towards political correctness, a recent court decision would prove otherwise. DailyTech summed up what happened pretty nicely:
This decision reversed a prior ruling made just two years ago, in which ten subpoenas were issued to people that would fit into the definition of "internet trolls" who took things to new extremes.

The funny thing is that this ruling actually limits individual rights because it theoretically takes away the right to control speech on private property.

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It may be, but it shouldn't, the ruling's kinda ambiguous. Because you can say certain things in public school you won't get in trouble for but you can't do the same thing in a private school. Of course that's provided that you don't disrupt class. So private property doesn't fall under the first amendment...unless this judge is trying to change that.

While most people inside and outside America feel that the right of free speech has succumbed to weaker minds and a move towards political correctness, a recent court decision would prove otherwise. DailyTech summed up what happened pretty nicely:
This decision reversed a prior ruling made just two years ago, in which ten subpoenas were issued to people that would fit into the definition of "internet trolls" who took things to new extremes.

I can't help but wonder if this was spurned on by the recent "Anonymous" movement against Scientology that began on the internet and escalated into streets around the world last weekend. I know that the Scientolgist lawyers had a video removed from the internet because it depicted Tom Cruise and was slamming the religion. The group "Anonymous" had filed a countersuit declaring First Amendment rights were not upheld here in America....